The Gallup polling organization reported Monday that President Obama has had a particularly pronounced summer swoon each year of his presidency, and that August typically brings his lowest approval ratings of all.
Throughout the day, the White House proceeded to demonstrate why this is so.
The death toll is approaching 1,000 in the Egyptian military's crackdown, the Edward Snowden case is straining international relations and new questions are emerging about privacy violations at the National Security Agency. But Obama, who just returned from a nine-day, six-golf-round vacation on Martha's Vineyard, remained out of sight at the White House.
Obama's press secretary, Jay Carney, was away, so the task of representing the White House to the outside world fell to one Josh Earnest, a deputy press secretary who lived up to his surname on Monday. For an hour, reporters quizzed him on the news of the day, and Earnest, his face burned by the Vineyard sun except where his sunglasses had been, responded by reading from a binder full of bromides.
"As you've heard the president talk about quite a bit, the economic interests of middle-class families is his top domestic priority," Earnest informed the assembled reporters.
"The president believes and understands that his chief responsibility as president of the United States is the national security of the United States of America and her citizens," he announced.
Right, right, but what about all the people being killed in Egypt?
"What you're asking is a pretty broad question," Earnest said, "because we're talking about a large number of people in a large country, under a lot of different circumstances."
This is not to pick on Earnest, a genial product of Kansas City, Mo., who is well-liked by the White House press corps. He was doing exactly what he was supposed to be doing: trying to get the president through the August doldrums without making news. And that's the problem.